Thursday, 17 October 2024
New diamond bonding technique a breakthrough for quantum devices
A paper has solved a major hurdle facing researchers working with diamond by creating a novel way of bonding diamonds directly to materials that integrate easily with either quantum or conventional electronics. With this technique, the team directly bonded diamond with materials including silicon, fused silica, sapphire, thermal oxide, and lithium niobate without an intermediary substance to act as 'glue.' Instead of the several-hundred microns thick bulk diamonds typically used to study quantum qubits, the team bonded crystalline membranes as thin as 100 nanometers while still maintaining a spin coherence suitable for advanced quantum applications.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Researchers develop recyclable, healable electronics
Electronics often get thrown away after use because recycling them requires extensive work for little payoff. Researchers have now found a w...
-
Do you need a MOSFET gate resistor? What value should it be? And should it go before or after the pulldown resistor? If you’re a bit impati...
-
I was first introduced to logic gates when I was around 14 years old. I had heard that computers consisted of ones and zeroes. But I didn’t...
-
In this project, I will show you how to build an Arduino Wattmeter, a device that can be used to measure the power consumed by a load. In ad...
No comments:
Post a Comment